Latest update March 20th, 2025 5:10 AM
Mar 28, 2017 News
GUYANA’s seven-year non-communicable diseases (NCDs) strategic plan needs a judicious mixture of partnerships and prioritisation, and sound implementation.
Dr. Beverley Barnett; Dr. Karen Cummings and Karen Roberts, Specialist -NCD’s and Family Health PAHO Guyana.
The 2013-2020 national NCD blueprint for the health sector called the ‘Integrated Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases in Guyana’ is modelled after existing best practices from regional, hemispheric and global approaches.
When she met yesterday with Dr. Karen Cummings, Minister within the Ministry of Public Health (MOPH), Dr. Beverley Barnett, consultant to PAHO/WHO said her visit is part of a wider initiative to undertake “a qualitative analysis” of the NCD strategies of four CARICOM states.
Guyana is the first country to be visited by Dr. Barnett under the regional plan. Dr Barnett is also scheduled to hold similar discussions with Barbados, Jamaica and St Kitts/Nevis.
Yesterday’s talks represented a deeper analysis with Dr. Cummings and were designed to elicit her perspective on Guyana’s NCD multi-sectoral plan, Barnett related.
The plan notes that Guyana will pursue a Health-in-All-Policies (HiAP) approach which envisions “strong leadership and political will”. Added to this, it encourages civic and private sectors participation while simultaneously challenging them to embrace the new approaches to combating NCDs which are also called chronic diseases.
The four main types of chronic diseases are cardiovascular diseases (such as heart attacks and stroke), cancers, chronic respiratory diseases (such as chronic obstructed pulmonary disease [COPD] and asthma) and diabetes.
Ageing, unplanned urbanisation and the popularisation of unhealthy lifestyles have been known to help fuel NCDs.
Added to this, the use of tobacco, lack of physical activities, unhealthy diet and abusing alcohol increase the risk of NCDs which disproportionately affect low and middle-income countries. Global statistics show that some 75 percent of all deaths from NCDs occur in low and middle-income countries.
That is why Dr. Barnett’s visit is so timely since Guyana has reached the half-way point in its programme implementation.
Prioritising their efforts in the sector “will be the key to implementing the NCDs strategy successfully. This will help individual countries better allocate human and financial resources and determine the best courses of action” to support their vision she said.
Establishing priority will also “greatly assist individual territories to make timely interventions to benefit their populations,” according to the consultant to PAHO/WHO.
In addition, Dr. Barnett suggested the Public Health Ministry establish partnerships with individual local sectors, its development partners and civil society for the success of the NCD strategy.
In his foreword, former Health Minister, Dr. Bheri Ramsarran, noted that NCDs have “emerged as a new frontier in the fight to improve health globally. The increase in such diseases means that they are now responsible for more deaths globally than all other causes combined.”
“The new Guyana NCD Strategic Plan will position our nation to mount an effective, sustainable response,” Dr. Ramsarran said.
The country’s NCD strategy is built on five planks: Risk factor reduction and Health Promotion; Integrated Disease Management and Patient self-management Education; Programme Management; Surveillance, Monitoring and Evaluation and Public Policy, Advocacy and Communication, according to Dr. Kavita Singh, of Ministry’s Chronic Disease Director.
Dr. Singh described the seven-year plan as “very comprehensive (and) if implemented accordingly will provide optimum health care and risk factor reduction” for its beneficiaries.
Dr. Cummings has embraced content of strategy and, like Dr. Singh, also emphasized the issue of implementation which she indicated will most likely include a redirection of human and financial resources “without losses where gains are made.”
Probing questions by Dr. Barnett should assist Guyana with identifying its strategy’s strengths and weaknesses, spotting any existing gap and help to generate recommendations to improve the Public Health Ministry’s seven-year NCD guide.
Mar 20, 2025
2025 Commissioner of Police T20 Cup… Kaieteur Sports- Guyana Police Force team arrested the Presidential Guards as they handed them a 48-run defeat when action in the 2025 Commissioner of Police...Peeping Tom… Kaieteur News- There was a time when an illegal immigrant in America could live in the shadows with some... more
Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the US and the OAS, Ronald Sanders By Sir Ronald Sanders Kaieteur News- In the latest... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]